West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 19 Nov 1903, p. 7

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ma mam maxim u.“ U”""' vvâ€"- -v ‘â€" - __ angling“ Tara siezx: Ito-:2 '.:-'~â€"“I.ost," or Cb" “etc--50 CC..{\ {Ur 111): illbcrtii (“each sub. fiqucnt in crzior3. 15 PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORRII‘O Inn MOLE mm "cuss, mu may DURHAM, ONT. W‘nsmc Fortrz mi tan-xx: 2~cmcnzs 8 C".'4~}.,t line for! 1.. c1}. ~t i:2~-.-nion' , 3 o .1: x 2. r ““3. o o unc ti'LCh 5313‘: ”1.2."... 13:39:? IIOF’“IR:..“U measure. Hcfcs:ion:zl cam. , nu: cxc ccd in: c..e i»: 5400? Pete. annum. Ann-12wwxwm 2.1.12.4) :sr‘tnil directxops Wil_1__bc p2 10.15563 2:21 225.2311 and chzuztul .. 2‘! .2] L‘V‘ 7‘: v‘r--â€" V â€" O O U u a All advcrusc mm, to ensure mscmon 1n currcft'. week, should be brought m not 13:: than '1 Uusulw normng. THE JOB : : DEPARTNENT W0“ THE Ctmnxxcu; will be sent to any addrcax', frgc of pmtagc, for $1.00 pcz BATES . . . . year, payaolc m advanceâ€"$1.50 may h charged if not. sq pan}. 1th (3th to which every M3209 :3 32d 2:. dawn: by me number on the; m tabs!- '0 pay-e3:- 533 ,c vntinuci unnl allarrc;1_ are paid. cxcep: a: Lzzc 01,111,;1 of m»,- ”apnea“. ‘ Alladvcttisc'mcms ordcrud byszmngcrs must ‘0 hr in advance. . . Contract razcs for ycany a "Icnxscmcnts {um application to th? office. A“ ‘ , 5‘0 ', bl . o o -- L.‘...-_- un.~A-.'l\“ ‘n I" Lambmz. i‘t' Ofilce 11mm: h‘ \EEM ll .4 131138.}! Drs. Earnieson S’a’éacdenaid. nl-‘i-‘IC‘IC AND RESIDENCE A .531 ians and Surgeons, Ontario. Office homs 9 to 11 n.12‘.‘ " m 4 p. m.: 7 tn 9 p, 11;. Residence :.m. 052:0, 01d Bank buildings. Upper I‘mxn Dmhum Telephone 30.10. I fice M'wr Eric-Lac}: izmk‘ store. :)flicn h0u1‘5,l“ 1" 1t) a. 11]., .- ’tU ‘lp. TI:. dd“ 7 10 3} p. m. Mme) :d. “.1102: fiun given to) diseases of wgmeu and cnildren. Residence up- posite L’rer n) todan Church. FE'IL ‘3‘-â€"' t: 'RS’I DOOR E ALE." 01’; She was at her fiercest. Cecil, disre- .he 1)}:leuxm 1’! 231' 13: kt? Guide; ':< zgmding her protest stooped and raised Block. Nautmnceâ€"L?mbtou htrmt LCiU' 3th? fallen Bedouin. He saw at a the. S‘Ctiuzi. . ” - giance that she has right. The 1mm, “" :daxk,lustfu1 face was set in the rigid- Pi 'ity of death. The bullet had passed w‘ 0‘ Ckermg’i .' D' S" “D S 3 straight through the temples. HONOR GRADUATE OF TO \O\-; “Did you never see a dead man be. t) I‘niversity: Graduate of ROMJ fore?” demanded (‘igmette impatiently College (“Er Dental *1 rwoum o (mtmio. :as he lingered. E\ on in this moment Room<-â€"-Ca d“ “be“ "“3“ 1 V“ Omce } he had more thought of this Arab than D Mchvtvre’ 3 Block, Loner ",I‘ovm Dur- ham Collection and Agencv prompth attended to. Searches made at the Regis- trv Ofiice. D Ufiice mer Garden’s new Jew-'ellex} Store, Luxxer '10“ n Durham. Anyamount of money tu 101m at 5 per cent. on farm property. D ancer,Etc., Etc. Money to Loan at reasonable rages, and 0:; terms to suit borrower. Ufhce, McIntyre Block Over the Bank. D vexancers Etc. \lonev to. Loan. Offices: Hunter’s \e“ Block, opposite the Chronicle Ofiice. A. G. MACKAY, K. C. er, Conveyancer, etc. Private money to loan. 01d accounts anti debts of all kinds collected on commission. Farms bought and sold. Insurance Agent, etc. Ofiiceâ€"MacKenzie’s Old Stand, Lower Town, Durham, Ont. .[1 Land Valuator and Licensed Auction- eer for the County 0: Grey. Sales promptly attended to and notes cashed. 1‘: Auctioneer for the County of Grey. Sales promptly attended to. Call at my residence or write to Allan Park P. O. Orders may be left. at the Chronicle ofiice. ensed Auctioneer for the County of Grey, Land Valuator, Bailifl' of the 2nd Dimion. Court Sales and all other matters romptl attended to. Huzhest refereencs nrnish if reqmred. foréing facilities J. G. Hutton, M. 3., C. M. .HYS‘ICIAN .-\N D SURGEON, OF- ARRISTER, SOLICITQR, EEC” 3. P. Teiferd. .mmsmn, somcrron, mu W. 8. Davidson. ARRISTER, NOTARY, CONvEy- ARRISTERS. SOLICITORS, GON- A. H. Jackson. OTARY PUBLIC, CQMAMISSION- AMES CARSON, DURHAM, LIC- shm’t distance ea OBERT BRIGHAM. LICENSED 'UGH MACKAY. DURHAM . Dr. T. E. Halt, L. D. ‘3. Enmm AND PROPRIETO): G. Lefroy McCaul. Aa’adim! Dzmzm firihur Gun, M. D. Dania! Dz’z-‘ccz'vi”:’. MacKay Dunn. 1.51931 Dz'nrdorv. CLARK. LICENSED AUC- oxj for ‘th‘e Qothy‘of Grey“ Salé W. IRWIN Miscellanaous. ncP east. ref Knapp ’s Jinn-l, :, Lira; T‘:M S‘, leU" “Alli o l 12 303.). U x.CIOCK. UOLL EB ‘51 PHY S {C- the Chronicle Ofiice. Is completely stocked with all NEW TYPE, thus af- for turning out First-class bystmngers must be r :xa'crtion, 25 cw W. F. DUNN. He laid the body down and looked at her with a glance that. rightly or wrongly, she thought had a rebuke in it. “Very many. Butâ€"it is never a pleasant sight. And they were in drink. They did not know what they did.” “W’hat divine pity! Good powder and ball were sore wasted, it seems. You would have preferred to lie there yourself, it appears. I beg your par- don for interfering with the prefer- ence.” Her eyes were flashing, her lips very scornful and wrathful. This was his gratitude! “Wait, wait,” said Cecil rapidly, lay- ing his hand on her shoulder as she flung herself away. “My dear child, do not think me ungrateful. I know well enough I should he a dead man myself had it not been for your gallant assist- ance. Believe me, I thank you from my heart.” Cigarette laughed. offended and scorn- ful as with the offense and scorn of one whose first science was impeached. “Look and welcome, but if you find any life in that Arab make a laugh of it before all the army tomorrow.” . “I owe you my life!” he so id rapidly “But. good heavens, you have shot the fellow dead”- “Happily for me, or I had been whore he lies now. But wait. Let me 1001;. There may be brvath in him yet.” Cigarette shrugged her shoulders. with a contemptuous glarzoe at the Bedouin’s corpse. “To be sure. 1 am not a bungler.” same!” The word had rankled in her. She could launch it now with telling re- prisal. He smiled, but he saw that his phrase, which she had overheard,- had not alone incensed but had wounded her. “Well, a little perhaps,” he said gen- fly. “How should it be otherwise? And, for that matter, I have seen many a. great lady look on and laugh her soft, cruel laughter while the pheasants were falling by hundreds or the stage being torn by the hounds. And they had not a tithe of your courage.” “Would you? I should not have for- given myself.” “Ah, you are just like Marquise. And you will end like him.”- “Very probably.” , “Why did you give those chessmen‘ ' to that silver pheasant?” she asked 1 him abruptly. “Silver pheasant?” “Yes. See how she sweeps, sweeps, sweeps so languid. so brilliant. so use- less-baht Why did you give them?’ “Sheadmired them. Itwasnotmuch‘ mm. ; .--_ “It is well for you that I ,was unsex- ed enough to be able to send an ounce of lead into a drunkard!” she pursued, with immeasurable disdain. “If I had been like that dainty aristocrat down there, it had been worse for you. I should have screamed and fainted and left you to be killed while I made a tableau. Oh-he, that is to be ‘feminlne,’ is it not?” “Where did you see that lady '2” he asked in some surprise. “Oh, I was there!” answered Ciga- rette, with a toss of her head south- ward to where the villa lay. “I went to see how you would keep your prom- “W ell, you saw I kept it.” She gave her little teeth a. sharp click like the click or a trigger; “Yes. And I, would have forgiven you if you haa broken 1t.” “But you think me ‘unsexed,’ all the “Like enoughz" He said it with his habitual gentle temper. but there was a shadow of pain in the words. The chessmen had become in some sort like living things to him through long asso- ciation. Cigarette. quick to sting. but as quick to repent using her sting. saw the regret in him. With the rapid. un- calculating Iiberality of an utterly un- selfish and intensely impulsive nature she hastened to make amends by say- ing what was like gall on her tongue in the utterance. “And yet.” she said quickly. “perhaps she will value them more than that. 1 know nothing of the aristocrats~nor I! When you were gone, she chan‘lpfonml you against the Black Hawk. Sim tuiti him that if you had not been a gentle- man before you came into the ranks she had never seen one. She spoke well. If you had but heard her!” “She did?” She saw his glance brighten as it turned on her in a surprised gratifica- tion. “Well, what is there so wonderful?” Cigarette asked it with a certain pet- ulauce and doggedness. taking a name- sake out of her breast pocket. biting,r its out} off and striking a fusee. A word from this aristocrat was more welcome to him than a bullet that had saved his 1? f'e! lior generosity had gone very far, and. like most generosity. got nothing for its pains. “Well! Well!" thought his champion as she made her way through the gay, lighted streets. “I swore to have my vengeance on him. t is a droll vengeance to save his life'” “Hohi. Cigarette!” cried the zouave Tat-:1. loaning out of the little case- ment of the As (in Pique, as she pa:;:;e:i it. “Come in. We have the devil’s own fun here”â€" “.‘IQ doubt!” retortmi the Friend of the Flag. “It wouid be odd if the mas- ter fiddler would not fiddle for his O ‘.‘.' U “A pretty song. yes. for a pigsty!” said Cigarette. with a glance into the chamber. and she shook his hand off her and went on down the street. A. night or two before a new song from Grisâ€"Gris: would have been a paradise to her, and she would have vaulted through the window a a sing-fie houm': into the pandemonium. Now, she did not know why. she found no eharm in it. And she went quietly home to her little straw bed in her garret and curled herself up like a kitten to sleep; but for the first time in her young life sleep did not come readily to her, and when it did come for the first time found a restless sigh upon her laugh- in}; mouth as she murmured. dream- ing, " 10W beautiful She is!” "Come in, my pretty one!” entreated Tam. stretching 01“: his brawny arms. “You will die of 1:1 :rhing if you hear Gris-Gris tonight. Such a song!” Sex Characteristics. Have you ever noticed in a fashion- able crwvd how much like'men the women are and how much like women the men? It is not that the men are really efi‘eminate or the women really masculine, as a keen observer once put it. but there is, nevertheless. a curious approximation in type. It may be to some extent a matter of dress. Women affect the mannish in their costume, men in summer seek more color. But it is not dress alone. The woman’s face seems stronger and the man’s less sen- sual than it would have been even a century ago. The figure. too, has chang- ed. The man is less gross, the woman more athletic. and both are taller.“ London Tatler. Lion Cuba as Pets. The most attractive household pets in the entire animal kingdom are said to be very young lion cubs. They are docile, affectionate and quick to learn tricks, it is said, besides being very decorative, considered merely as an ar- ticle of furniture. Persons who have adopted young lions as pets and en- joyed their society for any length of time are ever after intolerant of any animal so tame and uninteresting as a dog or a cat. A Quaint Sort of Wedding. When a marriage takes place among the Negritos, a people of the Philippine Islands, the Whole tribe assembles, and the aflianced pair climb two trees grow- ing close together. Then the elders bend the branches that the young folks are on till their heads meet. When the heads have thus touched each other the marriage is legally accomplished, and there are great rejoicings. A fantastic dance completes the ceremony. Spain Brought Us Hones. ' The Spaniards were the first to bring horses to this continent, though the paleontologists tell us that the rocks abound with fossils which show that equidae were numerous all over Amer- ica in the eoeepe period. It is-a singu- lar fact, however, that there were no horses in America when the first Euro- peans came hither.â€"John Gilmer Speed in Century. What She Ileant. “She told me,” said the young man who had consulted a fortune teller, “that I was born to command.” “Well, well l” exclaimed Henpeck. “She means then that you will never be married.”â€"Exchange. “Aunt Amy!” “Yes. Ethel.” “What is a confession?” “Gossiping about yourself, my; lest.” About th. 8180 of It. [To us: me ”3*:an Womanly Sympathy, Not Intellectu- ality. Count. at Last. “1 got another glimpse of the ‘eternal teminine’ recently ” says a Washi gton physician. “11nd I shall nex er again ex- press surprise that men of admitted in- tellect should marry women who are not their mental equals. Among my patients for the last few weeksâ€"in fact, until he diedâ€"was 21 1111111 of re- markable ability and character. The case had been in the hands of another doctor 11nd \\ hen I took 1:11:11}; e I saw that there was little hope of meorery. The illness was (0: 1131111 :11 al :11111. I will confess. dilfieult. of diagnosis. 111111 it was not 1111111 shortly before the fatal te‘ 111111.111011 that 1111 the sumptoms de~ veloped. “The patient’s wife \‘118 11 little wo- man whom one 1.2011111 best describe by the term ‘sweet.’ I never saw 11:11112 devotion displaved in 1119 sick 1110111. Her anxiety W111» 131111101111 1101' watch- ful care uncoum . 111111 I grew to 1001'. up 10 1101. But I never (11111111 explain to 1101' just what W113 11111 1111111111 with her husband, 111 11011;,11 after I wally 1'0 111d out I made the 11105;“: perSphlng efforts to do so. “ ‘I-IOW is he 101123.11 doctor?’ she would say in The 1111191 111tl1et1c1 :115 3111011. The first time 81111 1.1111; 1110 query I \1 cut into details by way of explanation. “ ‘The danger from pneumonia has diminished to a certain extent,’ I said, ‘but from the heart action I notice cer- tain symptoms of carditis which give very little grounds for hope.’ Then I would continue to explain the trend of the disease so simply. I thought, that a child could understand it. When I con- cludcd she nodded intelligently and said in a manner so pathetically sweet that my heart went out to her: To contradict your friends when they are «151313111 (1112:. Tos 1;.' smart things which may hurt 0110‘: feelings. It is bad to make remarks about the f00(.:11t dinner. To talk about things which only in. terest yourself. To Speak disrespectfully to any one older than yourself. To grumble about your home and rel- atives to outsiders. Boston the Literary Center. The assertion that Boston was the lit- erary centerâ€"without quotation marks -â€"during the period in which American literature acquired a shelf of its own in the library of the race is hardly open to dispute. The production of books possessing something like permanence is perhaps the most characteristic mark of a center to which the term “literary” in its true meaning of “related to liter- ature” may be applied. Name the Amer- ican writers Whose work has stood the test of half a century, and, with a few notable exceptions. they belong to Bos- ton and its neighborhood. All this is thrice familiar. The record of it in out- line or detail is a story which has been told by many tongues and many pens.â€" M. A. De Wolfe Howe in Atlantic. To be rude to those who serve you either in shop or at home. To dress shabbily in the morning be- cause no one will see you. To think first of your own pleasure when you are giving a party. To behave in a street car or train as if no one else had a right to be there.â€" Gem. To refuse ungmciously when some- body Wishes to do you a favor. Willtul Woman. After the 014 gentleman had invited the young one to be seated the latter coughed once or twice to clear his throat and than bluntly suggested that he Wished tO‘marry the old gentleman’s daughter. The old gentleman didn’t Wish to be too ready to give his consent, but he admitted after a few minutes he thought he had no objections. “That’s just the trouble,” protested the young man disconsolately. “It you’d only oppose it and order me out of the house once or twice and buy a bulldog I’d have some show of. getting her.” What It Really Lackcd. “I put in the French phrases hero and there,” said the would be author, “to give the book an atmosphere of cul- ture." “H’m!” remarked the critic. “It would have helped a bit it you had put in a little good English in spots.”- Delay Bu Advantages. First Farmerâ€"You oughter took I trip to New York' years ago. éecond Farmerâ€"Oh, I dunno. The longer you wait the more there is to see-Judge. The Night Traveler’s Experience. There is no place like home, especial- ly whefi vou are riding in a sleeping .It‘s well enough to elm at stars, but there are things below the level. or THE ETERNAL FEMlNINE. THINGS NOT TO DO. which :1". worth a. winging Shem}! Lenahaa ' PROMPT ATTENTION T0 PU RN ETU RE 3% KMmeyg Bladder v '~r- fl”- ‘5 - . 3 ) UNDERTAKENG 18:11 serum! complaints affect these organs. hence the kidneys are a great sou rce offhseztsc. Have you aching or weakness over the small of the back. LendepCF F0 unnate frequently. deposit in urine, coldness of hands or feet. a. drowsy feelmg m fhe morning. Don‘t :zegiect your kiduevs. Our New blcthod Trcatmcnt as guaranteed to cure any disease of these brgans or no pay. THE PEOPLE SAY NEW GOODS ARRIVING DAILY , a. . . v A .Â¥l<»$!‘ a? uMIK‘.. CEQ. Also a full line of Crockery and Glassware always on hand. Come in and inspect it. A fresh 101 of groceries always on hand. 0f the. best mak For an kinds of DEPARTMENT. .% new : : McKechnies are Always Busy : : 3E TR Y Flames Used Without Writtefn Consent We now have about thirty cases of GRANBY RUBBERS mm $312? 31W WW!!- 1‘31" on hand. They are the best. m THE POPULAR CASH STORE. THE POPULAR CASH STORE. DULH 1%? MARBLE a: GPA Mf?EI VJORKS. Latest Design in Markers. Headstones n.. “Monuments. All work war: :Inted. Ouiers taken by Messrs. Barclay Bez‘ h Direct importers. from En American and Canadian u DURHAM - AND - MT. FOREST DURHA M SCHOOL, The school is eqmppvd i'm mu Matriculation work, and of competent teachers. Iumnding studcmx alumni f nmr term. or as soon am r as ptwsiblc. W M. .1 MISSION . THOS. ALLAN, Principal. MISS L.£.\1.]‘011F.\I:.( lagsic'si. md ".vlmlems -v.'~...~ A. \I. SHEI’I’AI‘ D ,1. t Class meessiona (Specialist) Fees. $1.00 per month. ROBINSCN CORBE’E '1‘. STAFF AND I‘QIIII’ME: 1. Chaim] P R‘ V) ‘or full J unior_Leaving :, under the mliowmg rs tor that department: RAM AG E, Secretary Lut‘mman , u marries. nginning 03.

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